Feds Double Down On Pills As Fentanyl Deaths Double

Feds Double Down On Pills As Fentanyl Deaths Double

http://www.pressreleasepoint.com/feds-double-down-pills-fentanyl-deaths-double

By Josh Bloom — July 14, 2018

Here’s a splendid idea. Let’s say that North Korea finally comes up with a missile that can travel more than 20 feet before blowing up and they decide to launch one at California. Naturally, we would retaliate by attacking… Sweden.

Ridiculous, right? Maybe so, but conceptually it is not a whole lot different from our war on the “opioid epidemic,” which, to be accurate, should be called by its correct name – the “fentanyl epidemic.” The strategy that our government is employing is is much like attacking Sweden. We are fighting the wrong enemy. Pain medications, like Percocet and Vicodin, on their own, kill few relatively few people while illicit fentanyl and its monster analogs like carfentanil are responsible for the carnage we see daily on the news.

The proof of the failure of our inept strategy comes to us from the occasionally-reliable CDC in its July 11th report “Rising Numbers of Deaths Involving Fentanyl and Fentanyl Analogs, Including Carfentanil, and Increased Usage and Mixing with Non-opioids.”

The new report corrects previous data, which understated the number of fentanyl and fentanyl analog deaths. This is not the first time the CDC corrected itself. The last one – only a few months ago – was a real doozie. (1) 

The current update includes information on: (1) the continued increase in the supply of fentanyl and fentanyl analogs detected by law enforcement; (2) the sharp rise in overdose deaths involving fentanyl and fentanyl analogs in a growing number of states, in particular the growing number of deaths involving the ultra-high potency fentanyl analog known as carfentanil…The current update includes information on: (1) the continued increase in the supply of fentanyl and fentanyl analogs detected by law enforcement; (2) the sharp rise in overdose deaths involving fentanyl and fentanyl analogs in a growing number of states, in particular the growing number of deaths involving the ultra-high potency fentanyl analog known as carfentanil…

Here are some of the depressing (but not at all surprising) data from the CDC via the agency’s Health Alert Network:

  • Deaths involving illicit fentanyl and its analogs more than doubled from 2015 to 2016, rising from 14,440 to 34,119
  • This trend worsened in 2017.  There were an estimated 25,460 such deaths during the first six months of the year alone

OK, let’s stop and make a graph of the number of deaths from these data.

Source: Deaths from all drugs by year: National Vital Statistics System, Deaths from fentanyl and its analogs: National Institute On Drug Abuse (2). 2017 data are currently available only for the first six months of the year. I doubled it for the purposes of the graph, giving an estimate of 50,000 fentanyl deaths. In reality, given the explosive increase, the real number will almost certainly be higher. 

Now let’s take some liberties with the data. If the CDC can do this I figure I’m entitled to a certain amount of extrapolation, even though it is certifiably crazy. The liberty I took was extending the projected deaths out to 2019 based on the slopes of the lines in the past few years. Of course, assuming that these slopes will remain the same is bogus. But it’s not a whole lot worse than the tricky stats that the CDC and PROP toss around and it illustrates a point.

 

Can you imagine the headlines in 2019???

“Fentanyl Responsible For 100,000 Of The 95,000 Drug Overdose Deaths In The US”

Which could only be explained by another headline…

“Fentanyl Kills Some People More Than Once”

OK, you get the point. As I’ve said a million times, it is street fentanyl (illegally made fentanyl and its analogs) that is the real enemy. So how are our leaders reacting? Not so well.

  1. Andrew Kolodny could not have kept a straight face when he said this, right?

“[A 5% drop in addiction diagnosis] means that there’s light at the end of the tunnel”

Buzzfeed News, July 12, 2018

I’m not sure what tunnel he’s looking in, but he seems to be quite delighted with the fact that there were only 5.9 “opioid use disorder diagnoses” per 100,000 in 2017 compared to 6.2 in 2016. This whopping decrease (5%) could be explained by a difference in diagnostic criteria or statistical noise but if it’s even real then does a decrease of 0.3 “addicted” people (3) per 100,000 really qualify as good news when the number of those dropping dead from fentanyl is doubling every six months? 

  1. And the Department of Justice hasn’t quite figured things out, which is evident from Attorney General Jeff Sessions:

“Under this proposed new rule [which restricts the number of pills that can be made], if DEA believes that a company’s opioids are being diverted for misuse, then they will reduce the amount of opioids that company can make,” 

Jeff Session, Reuters, April 2018

So, I guess if we make fewer pills then fewer people will die from fentanyl. Which is fine except for a 25% drop in opioid prescriptions over the past five years has been accompanied by a 25-fold increase in fentanyl deaths. Yeah, that’s gonna work.

And the $64,000 question is why people like Sessions are still using the 64,000 number, even though we all know that it has virtually nothing to do with overdoses of Vicodin or Percocet. From the same article:

Approximately 64,000 Americans lost their lives to drug overdoses in 2016, the highest drug death toll and the fastest increase in that death toll in American history.Today we are facing the deadliest drug crisis in American history… “Approximately 64,000 Americans lost their lives to drug overdoses in 2016, the highest drug death toll and the fastest increase in that death toll in American history.

President Trump doesn’t seem all that familiar with the facts either.

And you have people that go to the hospital with a broken arm, and they come out and they’re addicted.  They’re addicted to painkillers, and they don’t even know what happened.  They go in for something minor, and they come out and they’re in serious shape.

Remarks by President Trump at the White House Opioids Summit, March 1, 2018

No, that is incorrect. People don’t go into the hospital and come out in serious shape because:

  1. The is plenty of literature that shows that pain patients rarely become addicted, especially in such a short timeframe.
  2. With the anti-opioid hysteria we’re now going through if you go into the hospital with a broken arm it’s not all that unlikely that you’ll be accused of breaking your own arm just to get high and sent home with Tylenol, which works as well as a Tootsie Roll.

Speaking of broken bones, who could forget what the empathetic Jeff Sessions has to say about that:

“I mean, people need to take some aspirin sometimes and tough it out a little…That’s what Gen. Kelly—you know, he’s a Marine—[he] had surgery on his hands, painful surgery. [He said,] ‘I’m not taking any drugs!’ It did hurt, though. It did hurt. A lot of people—you can get through these things.” (4)

So, the war goes on and on and on, people keep dying, and no one in our government seems to be learning anything.

Perhaps Lichtenstein will be in our sights once we get rid of Sweden. Pathetic.  

NOTES:

(1) See The CDC Quietly Admits It Screwed Up Counting Opioid Pills

(2) Data are taken from a graph and are approximate.

(3) Data consisted of Blue Cross Blue Shield members.

(4) I can’t help but wonder if Sessions would change his tune if went to an ER with an elephant tusk embedded in his rectum and was sent home with one baby aspirin.

5 Responses

  1. 30 years ago Mr Trump said it would be smarter and better for everyone if all drugs were legalized, this was during an interview with a Miami tv station. We need to remind him of this and how right he was/is.

  2. It is extremely troubling that the CDC continues to manipulate numbers and facts on this subject. Even when the agency is shamed into correcting the lies it has spread, like in its July 11 report, it makes sure to begin the mea culpa with the same old, deliberately misleading: “Drug overdoses killed 63,632 Americans in 2016. Nearly two-thirds of these deaths (66%) involved a prescription or illicit opioid.” (This is tantamount to suggesting that there are 1000 deaths each year due to eating untainted and rotten fish—leading the reader to believe that fish, generally, is the problem. And what’s with the “a prescription”? What kind of “a prescription”? Statin? Antidepressant? Antibiotic?)

    As the CDC public disinformation agency intends, most people reading this will arrive at the conclusion that 63,632 people were killed by prescription opioid pain medications. They were NOT. It should not be hard to state the simple truth that “Drug overdoses, from ALL DRUGS (including aspirin, acetaminophen, antidepressants, and cocaine) killed 63,632 Americans in 2016,” but then the CDC has a serious, serial truth problem. Really, it must be considered a grave crisis hazardous to public mental health when every time the nation’s most prominent HHS agency opens its collective mouth, one must assume it is spreading lies or trying to mislead the public.
    The number of annual deaths from prescription opioids from 2002–2015 ranged between 9,000 and 17,000, the latter figure half the number of annual deaths by accidental falls. “Is the US having an ‘accidental fall epidemic’? Why not? Of course, the figure 63,632 is inaccurate, but so is 17,000, because opioid overdose deaths are often the result of polypharmacy. When the other drugs, especially alcohol and cocaine, are included, it can reasonably be assumed that the number of deaths from prescription pain medicines alone will be much lower, perhaps in the neighborhood of 5,000—about the same as bicycle-related deaths.” (Josh on acsh.org)

    This article by Michael Schatman and Steven Ziegler in the Journal of Pain Research is a must-read for everyone to gain an understanding of the CDC’s war on truth and decency. https://www.dovepress.com/getfile.php?fileID=38986
    The authors get right to it: “Transparency, freedom from bias, and accountability are, in principle, hallmarks of taxpayer-funded institutions. Unfortunately, it seems that at least one institution, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), continues to struggle with all three. What began with a prescribing guideline created in secrecy has now evolved to the use of statistical data and public statements that fail to capture not only the complex- ity of the problem but also the distinction between licit and illicit opioids and their relationship to the alarming increase in unintentional overdose. This is unfortunately consistent with Mark Twain’s assertion that “There are lies, there are damn lies, and then there are statistics.”

  3. as I said earlier,all this constriction will most certainly backlash in various clandestine and/or outright violent backlashes.Serious pain does not’resolve itself’It inflates like a water balloon till it burst and splatter all over.As I told before,some are casing those infirm/elderly at drug store exits and bullying the script bags from them,then bolting.As if the police dont have enough to do already….If you are blessed enough to have a fearless Dr.,you still have feces to deal with like Wally’s ,CVS,wally-Fart and many others.I predict a climb in armed robberies and nitetime B&E’s with those.Then,the very deepest sludge to mire thru,ass-surance companies,who well are familiar with cancer pain[right?]At this point,I’m almost ready to say,YES!bring on the home lab shit,illicit street drugs and all the crap they say is killing us.I mean,if the powers that be wont allow the process in a legal.safe and appropiate medical process,then what the hell?Even being dead gets your pain gone!Hence the hike in suicides.I dont condone killing oneself,but a part of me has compassion on it.THIS WHOLE CAN OF WORMS IS CREATING THE VERY SITUATION THEY CLAIM THEY ARE TRYING TO CURB!!!A 3 yr.old could figure it out!I lost my best friend of 40 yrs.to an overdose[cocaine,not opiods]He had no intention of this,was happier than I had ever seen him-but he erred in judgement of what his cardio system could handle.There was Narcan on hand,but itdoes not address cocaine issues.I have a raw,open wound in my heart missing his company that refuses to leave,but as a Christian[both of us]I take comfort that I will see him again.My suggestion is that ALL of you get right w/Jesus so that you can have the same assurance!By no means are we perfect,but we are forgiven and life is restored.Pls.everyone,take heart and think on these things.Thank You and Love!

  4. *palm smacks my forehead*
    This is stupefying, mystifying, and logic/common sense defying. And it pisses me the hell off!!
    For a few reasons…
    My main reason is that this only furthers my belief that in my lifetime (and I’m 40) we will see heroin legalized. The “experiment” in Sweden turned out to be a success and I use Sweden because they are the hallmark country to implement this program.
    Now, with the success Sweden has experienced Canada is tossing the idea around which would only further resolve the opinions of folks here in the US that heroin should be legalized. The legalization in many states of marijuana has opened the floodgates, IMO, and will make it seem more acceptable to legalize heroin. There are already needle exchange programs throughout our country so it really doesn’t seem that farfetched.
    What really chaps my backside is the manner in which the heroin program is set up. Nice, clean gov’t run centers where all the addicts gather to receive their dose of heroin. They are also allowed to inject there as well so they can be looked after if something were to go awry.
    What nearly pushes me over the edge is that our very prescribed medication, to treat legitimate illnesses. To treat our Chronic Pain. To provide a quality of life is becoming illegal.
    YES, I say illegal.
    Doctors are refusing to prescribe it. Pharmacies are refusing to fill it. Insurances are refusing to cover the cost.
    And the very drug that brought is here could be supplied in our neighborhoods/communities in a clean, sterile gov’t run facility. Legally….Grrrrr
    I know this was a long post. Thank flr taking the time to read it.

    **How we choose to manage our Chronic Pain should be our choice.
    **There is no room for the government in a responsible doctor/patient relationship.
    **Suicide is not Pain Management.

  5. Thank you Steve, a lot of great information!!

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